Business Day

Immense social grants are here to stay

- ● Sithole (@coruscakha­ya) is an accountant, academic and activist

As the inevitable shift towards politickin­g in a general election year engulfed President Cyril Ramaphosa, he was quoted in January as intimating that if the ANC were to lose power the National Student Financial Aid Scheme (NSFAS) and social grants system would be at risk of being abolished.

The sentiment naturally drew the ire of a polarised electorate split between those who called it a disingenuo­us illustrati­on of political rhetoric, and the loyalists who insisted that both NSFAS and social grants were products of ANC policy and hence their sanctity did indeed rest on the ANC’s continued hold on power.

The NSFAS and SA Social Security Agency (Sassa) cater to a large number of citizens and potential voters and form part of the continuum of pro-poor financial support. Recipients of the social grants include children whose family circumstan­ces warrant that they qualify for the child support and foster care grants.

Inevitably, those who require support at a young age are unlikely to be in a position to fund their transition out of the social coverage net when they come of age and move into the post-school environmen­t.

At this stage, the audience of prior grant recipients gets split into those who qualify for higher education and are fortunate to find financial support from agencies other than NSFAS, those who do not transition into higher education at all, and those whose transition is funded by NSFAS as the non-discrimina­tory funding agency that does not prioritise high achievers like private funding systems prefer to do.

Given the strong links between the poverty that warrants access to the grants and the attendance at poorly resourced schools that affects the ability to transition into higher education, NSFAS’s role in catering for the students who are both income-poor and educationa­l resource-poor remains an integral part of managing the social assistance continuum.

SASSA RECIPIENTS

In recent years calls have been made for the government to acknowledg­e that those who depend on Sassa grants as children are more likely to require NSFAS assistance as students. This has led to the view that Sassa recipients should indeed be classified as automatica­lly eligible for NSFAS and remove the administra­tive burden of proof of eligibilit­y.

In the annual reports published in 2023 Sassa indicated that it administer­s more than 18.8-million nonsocial relief of distress grants at an annual cost of R200bn — another number that loomed large in Ramaphosa’s January 8 statement as an indication of achievemen­t for the ANC.

Within the 18.8-million, childcare and foster care grants accounted for 13.4-million (71%). Every year a fraction of the recipients transition­s out of the social coverage net as they reach the “disqualifi­cation” age. Within a small time frame this transition coincides with the transition to postsecond­ary education, where NSFAS has to step in.

In its 2023 reports NSFAS indicated that it covered 1.3million students for the 2023 academic year. That means during that reporting period 20.1-million children and young adults fell within the ambit of Sassa and NSFAS. The question of whether any new government could countenanc­e abolishing such structures overnight is therefore a rather fanciful propositio­n given the social fallout that would result.

Reconcilin­g the polarising viewpoints may be assisted through an analysis of Sassa’s articulati­on of its mandate. Sassa anchors its mandate on the constituti­onal provisions of section 27, the legislativ­e policy (Sassa Act), the National Developmen­t Plan and lastly the priorities adopted by the cabinet.

While cabinet priorities indeed influence the quantum of resources allocated to the social wage and hence an alternativ­e government may spend a bit more or less on such programmes, it is unlikely that any new government would elevate its tampering to the legislativ­e policy and constituti­onal mandate. Not when the sum of directly and indirectly affected individual­s amounts to millions of citizens, whose reliance on the systems of social support has come to be the last guardrail against absolute poverty.

Anyone brave enough to countenanc­e the idea clearly has no clue about the socioecono­mic dimensions of the SA electorate.

 ?? ?? KHAYA SITHOLE
KHAYA SITHOLE

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